Article ID: | iaor20121545 |
Volume: | 136 |
Issue: | 1 |
Start Page Number: | 137 |
End Page Number: | 150 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2012 |
Journal: | International Journal of Production Economics |
Authors: | Li Suhong, Visich John K, Reyes Pedro M |
Keywords: | allocation: resources, statistics: inference |
This research first conceptualizes, develops, and validates four constructs for studying RFID in health care, including Drivers (Internal and External), Implementation Level (Clinical Focus and Administrative Focus), Barriers (Cost Issues, Lack of Understanding, Technical Issues, and Privacy and Security Concerns), and Benefits (Patient Care, Productivity, Security and Safety, Asset Management, and Communication). Data for the study were collected from 88 health care organizations and the measurement scales were validated using structural equation modeling. Second, a framework is developed to discuss the causal relationships among the above mentioned constructs. It is found that Internal Drivers are positively related to Implementation Level, which in turn is positively related to Benefits and Performance. In addition, Barriers are found to be positively related to Implementation Level, which is in contrast to the originally proposed negative relationship. The research also compares perception differences regarding RFID implementation among the non‐implementers, future implementers, and current implementers of RFID. It is found that both future implementers and current implementers consider RFID barriers to be lower and benefits to be higher compared to the non‐implementers. This paper ends with our research implications, limitations and future research.